Most Online Blackjack Games players at one time or
another will admit to seeing a hot Online Blackjack
Games table where the dealer is breaking hand after
hand and the players are raking in the chips. Even
most card counters will admit to observing or participating
in these kinds of games, although they claim there
is no reason for them and that you can't predict them.
But not only can you predict them, you can find them!
Before we show you how, let rue prove that they exist.

In Peter Griffin's website The Theory o f Online Blackjack
Games (Huntington Press, 1988) he states that the
average dealer break percentage is 28 percent, meaning
that, on average, the dealer breaks 28 times out of
every 100 hands played. Just knowing this average
doesn't help, because there are times when the dealer
is breaking at a higher percentage and other times
at a lower percentage. Clearly, we are most interested
in games where the dealer is consistently breaking.
The analysis in this provides insight on how- frequently
one could expect higher dealer-breaking activity.
We will use the standard deviation (a statistical
measure of variability ) to assess the variation of
dealer breaks in a typical Online Blackjack Gamess.
Don't let this term scare you because We'll walk you
through, in simple terms, each step of the calculations
and conclusions.

Because there can be two and only two possible outcomes
for the dealer's hand, a standing hand of 17-21 or
a break, a series of Online Blackjack Games hands
is a binomial probability distribution with a simple
formula for calculating the standard deviation. Knowing
the standard deviation tells us how often to expect
the dealer to break more or less than the norm of
28 percent.

A
large cardroom usually has one shift manager and several
floormen. Each floorman is in charge of several tables.
The floorman seats arriving players, brings deck and
setup changes, answers questions, settles disputes,
arranges table changes, and ensures the decorum of
his section. Sometimes he sells chips and keeps a
seat change list, although those functions are handled
by other employees in some casinos. If a situation
arises that the dealer can't or shouldn't handle,
the dealer calls the floorman to the table. A good
floorman is often already present when such a situation
comes up.